Battle of Lookout Mountain
THE BATTLE OF
LOOKOUT
MOUNTAIN
GILBERT MORRIS
MOODY PUBLISHERS
CHICAGO
© 1996 by
GILBERT L. MORRIS
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
All Scripture quotations are taken from the King James Version of the Bible.
Interior and Front Cover Design: Ragont Design
Back Cover Design: Brady Davidson
Cover Illustration: Brian Jekel
ISBN: 978-0-8024-0917-1
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To Troy and Jason Freeman—
Two straight arrows
I hope you like this story!
Contents
1. Home Again
2. A New Face
3. “Just Leave Me Alone”
4. Bare Knuckles
5. Old-Time Religion
6. A Hasty Decision
7. Home to Tennessee
8. Battle Fury
9. A Defeated Army
10. “You Mean—She Might Die?”
11. Love Never Changes
12. Lori and Drake
13. Prelude to Battle
14. Greater Love Has No Man
15. A New Beginning
16. A Surprise for Sarah
1
Home Again
As soon as Leah Carter dumped the bucket of field corn into the trough, all seven suckling pigs came running across the lot. She smiled at their squeals, and as their pink snouts pushed into the corn she laughed at their eagerness.
“You have the worst manners of any pigs I ever saw! Look at you, Jacob—shoving your brother out of the way! Now you stop that!”
Leah had named all of the pigs after characters in the Bible, and now she saw that she had named them well. The one named Cain was snapping at the one she had named Abel. She caught Cain’s tail and dragged him backward.
“You give your brother a fair share of that corn!” she scolded.
But Cain was true to his name. He snorted and bit at her wickedly, and when she released him he plunged back into the mass of squirming piggish bodies.
Leah gave up on the pigs and leaned on the fence to watch as they chewed and grunted. “You look like some of the Franklin family at the church picnic. I never saw such greed!” she said aloud.
But there was a smile on her face for she loved animals and took pleasure in raising them. Somewhere down the line she knew they would all either be sold or end up on her plate as pork chops. However, she had learned to forget this—or at least put it out of her mind.
A slight July breeze blew Leah’s hair and cooled her face. She was a tall girl of fifteen and saw herself as gawky. Her mother had said, “You’re going to be stately, Leah, not a giantess!” and another time Ma had said sharply, “Stop stooping over! God gave you a tall, good figure—now don’t be ashamed of being tall.”
Leah, like many young girls her age, was too conscious of her appearance. Actually she had nothing to be ashamed of. She had light blonde hair, very fine, that hung to her waist when it was not braided and coiled around the back of her head as it was now. Her eyes were a light green that sometimes seemed almost blue. One of her uncles, who had been to the ocean, said, “Leah, your eyes are just the color as the sea at certain times of the morning—not quite blue, not quite green, just a little bit of each.”
She had an oval face with a shapely wide mouth, and her complexion was fair. She had a few freckles across her nose—which she hated.
Leah drifted off in thought, wondering how Jeff Majors would think of the way she was growing up. Jeff was one year older. They had birthdays on the same date, June 15, and until the time that the Majorses left Kentucky, they had spent every birthday party together.
The thought of Jeff’s leaving saddened Leah. “I hate this old war,” she muttered. Her brother, Royal, had gone to fight for the Union, while Jeff’s family had gone to Virginia to side with the South. Now Jeff was a drummer boy in the Confederate army—his father was a major—and, strangely enough, Jeff’s older brother, Tom, was back here with the Carters after having had his leg shattered at Gettysburg.
For a while Leah thought of the days when she and Jeff had roamed the hills hunting birds’ eggs and chasing possums and raccoons, or fishing. “I wish the war was all over,” she said, “and everything could be like it was again. I wish—”
Suddenly strong arms wrapped around Leah, pinning her arms to her side and squeezing her so that she could not get her breath. She was lifted clear off the ground, and she squealed in sudden fear. The arms merely tightened, and she felt a face press against the back of her head—and then she got a resounding kiss on her right cheek!
“Is that you all got to do—stay out here and watch pigs, Leah?”
Leah felt herself released, and she whirled to see Royal standing before her, grinning.
“Royal!” She threw her arms around him and pressed her face against his chest, and his arms closed around her again. Fear that he would be hurt or even killed in battle had been with Leah every day her brother had been gone. And now he was back!
Trying to put an angry expression on her face, she said, “Royal, I could shoot you! Why didn’t you tell us you were coming home?”
“Didn’t know it,” he said airily.
Her brother was not tall—not over five eight or nine—but he was strongly built. He had a cheerful face, hair only a little darker than Leah’s, and amazingly light blue eyes. They looked like cornflowers, Leah once told him. He was called “the Professor” by the soldiers in his unit, for he had spent one year in college and usually had his nose in a book.
He reached out and pinched Leah’s chin. “Anyway, I wanted to surprise you,” he said.
“Have you been to the house to see Ma and Pa?”
“No, just got here. Come on—you can take me in.”
Leah grabbed Royal’s hand as they walked toward the house. She fired questions at him, which he answered as best he could. They climbed the steps to the white two-story farm home, entered through the front door, and went down the wide hall that led to the kitchen.
“Ma—Pa—look who’s here.”
Dan and Mary Carter rushed to Royal and embraced him.
“Why, Son, what a great surprise!” Mr. Carter said. “How long can you stay?”
His father was thin, with the sickly look of the chronically ill. He had brown hair, faded blue eyes, and a firm mouth under a scraggly mustache. He had been shot up badly in the Mexican War and now was a sutler. He followed the Union army in his wagon, carrying supplies such as paper, pins, needles and thread, and special foods that the soldiers liked. Leah sometimes went with him.
“How long can I stay?” Royal repeated. “Long enough to eat you out of house and home, Pa.” He hugged his mother with one arm and shook his father’s hand at the same time. “Ma, I’m expecting to be fed like the Thanksgiving turkey before he becomes the dinner!”
Mrs. Carter was an attractive woman. She had the same blonde hair and blue-green eyes as his sister Leah, and there was a strength in her that e
veryone recognized. “I might know you’d come home hungry,” she said. “You sit right down there. I’ll start making one of those cherry pies.”
“Make one just for me, Ma.”
“You start the pie, Ma,” Leah said. “Come, Royal—I’ve got a surprise for you.”
Their parents looked at her as if they knew what was on her mind. “You bring him back soon,” Mrs. Carter said.
“Where are we going?” Royal asked as Leah hauled him by the hand out of the kitchen and through the back door.
“You’ll see.” She pulled him down the steps and then turned him to face the huge walnut tree that shaded the backyard. Underneath it a small group sat on a quilt spread on the ground—Royal’s other sisters, Sarah and Morena, and a man playing with a year-old blonde baby.
At the sight of the man, Royal dropped Leah’s hand and yelled, “Tom—Tom Majors!” and ran across the yard.
Tom Majors looked up. Tom had been Royal’s best friend since boyhood. He was wearing a checked red-and-white shirt and gray trousers.
Royal crossed the yard in bounds, dropped down beside his friend, and beat him on the shoulders. “Tom, you old son of a gun, what are you doing here?”
The last he had heard, Tom was a sergeant in the Confederate army, and Royal couldn’t imagine how he had gotten back to neutral ground in Kentucky— right here at his own home.
Suddenly a cry rose from Tom’s lips, and Royal stopped abruptly and drew back. Tom Majors was dark complexioned, but now his face was pale, and there was pain in his eyes.
“What’s wrong, Tom? I didn’t hurt you, did I?” But even as Royal spoke, he saw that Tom’s left leg was missing below the knee. He stood up quickly. “Well—say—I’m sorry—I didn’t know, Tom.”
Tom Majors pulled himself to his feet. Reaching out, he took the pair of crutches that was leaning against the tree trunk and settled them under his arms. “That’s all right, Royal,” he said quietly.
Silence fell over the group then. The girl beside him—Royal’s sister Sarah—was the first to recover. “I’m so glad to see you, Royal,” and as he put his arms around her, she kissed him on the cheek. “How long can you stay?”
“Maybe a couple of weeks,” Royal said. He was still stunned by Tom’s injury, and his mind swirled as he tried to think of what to say. Finally, being an honest young man, he turned to his friend and asked, “Where did you get hit, Tom? Gettysburg?”
“That’s right.”
Royal waited for him to say more, but Tom Majors simply pressed his lips tightly together.
“Well, I’m glad it wasn’t worse,” Royal said quickly. “How did you get here?”
“Jeff and Sarah brought me. I was hurt too bad to travel back to Virginia. She’ll tell you about it. I’ll be seeing you around, Royal.” Tom put out the crutches and swung his body along, his face hidden. He disappeared around the house, and Royal stared after him.
Then Royal felt a hand and looked down to see his eleven-year-old sister Morena tugging at him. She too had blonde hair, but there was a blankness in her blue eyes. She had developed into a beautiful child physically, but mentally she never had matured.
Royal swept her up in his arms. “Morena,” he said, “you are getting prettier all the time.”
She laughed and patted his cheek.
Sarah and Leah stood quietly waiting as he played with the child.
And then he looked up. “Tell me about it.”
Sarah said quietly, “It was a miracle really, Royal. I’d gone to Gettysburg to be with Abigail Munson. She was having her first child and was pretty much alone. I was there when the battle took place. Tom and Jeff were there with the army. When Tom lost his leg and couldn’t travel, we had to do something. It was impossible to get back to Virginia. Both he and Jeff would have been captured.” Her blue eyes were thoughtful as she remembered that time. “I bought a wagon and team—we traveled at night, dodging Union patrols until we got back here.”
“Tom’s changed, Royal,” Leah said. “His leg is healing, but he seems to have given up. He just won’t take an interest in anything—he’s not the Tom we knew.”
Royal glanced in the direction where Tom had disappeared. “Maybe I can help him,” he said. “We were always real close.”
Sarah hesitated. “I hope you can.”
The thought came to Royal that Sarah was closer to Tom than anyone else—they had been almost engaged before the war started. He studied her face and knew that, if Sarah could not help Tom, it would be difficult for anyone to help.
“Well, I’ll do the best I can—we all will,” he said. Then he knelt beside the baby on the quilt. “Look at Esther—she’s growing like a tadpole turning into a frog.”
“That’s awful, Royal!” Sarah protested. “To call a child a frog! She’s the prettiest baby that ever was!”
Esther was the only sister of Tom and Jeff. Her mother had died giving birth to her, and since all the Majors men were in the Confederate army, the Carters, their old neighbors, had taken the child to raise.
Royal picked her up, and she squealed. He said, “She is good-looking, the best-looking female on the place.” He winked at his sisters. “But don’t tell Ma I said so.”
At supper that night there was great rejoicing. Mrs. Carter loaded the table, with help from her two daughters: pork chops, fresh ham, fried chicken, mashed potatoes, candied yams, green beans— and two luscious cherry pies in crumbly crusts.
Royal finally leaned back after his third piece of pie. “It would be a sin to eat any more of this,” he declared.
“It was a sin about a half hour ago, I think, Son.” His father grinned at him. “I believe we have all committed gluttony tonight.”
“Tell us some more about the army, Royal,” Leah said eagerly.
“Well, Tom here could tell you more than I could. For us it’s been either bored to death or scared to death.”
Sarah was sitting next to Tom. “What do you mean?” she asked.
Royal had noticed that Tom had scarcely touched his food. He’d been mostly just pushing it around with his fork. He had not said ten words either. But at mention of the war, his hand closed tightly on his fork, the knuckles growing white.
“I mean it’s either weeks or even months of drilling—the same old thing every day. Then you go into a battle, and for about one day or two you’re scared to death. Is that the way it was with you fellas, Tom?”
“Just about.” Tom’s face was pale, and his voice was low. He did not contribute anything else to the conversation although he had been through every major battle.
Since Tom had been on the opposite side, from time to time Royal had had nightmares that one day on the battlefield he would face a young fellow in a gray uniform and that fellow would be his best friend, Tom Majors.
Leah obviously saw that Tom was not going to participate in the conversation. “Come on into the parlor, Royal,” she said. “I want to show you some pictures. A traveling photographer came, and we all had our pictures made.”
“But I haven’t had my coffee yet.”
“I’ll bring it to you,” his mother said. “You go on in. You girls too. I’ll do the dishes.”
The girls protested, but not very much. Sarah finally said, “You come too, Ma. We can all wash the dishes later.”
The parlor was a pleasant room with whale oil lamps on the heavy walnut tables. Royal and his sisters seated themselves on the horsehide sofa, Royal in the middle with Leah and Sarah on each side. Morena came to sit on his lap, and across the room Tom sat, holding the baby, Esther. He stroked her hair gently and, as the others exclaimed and laughed over the pictures, he seemed to be far away.
Perhaps he was thinking about his father, now a major in the Confederate army, and his brother, Jeff, a private—wondering if they were about to go into another battle. He glanced down at his pinned-up left trouser leg, and a spasm of pain crossed his face.
From across the room Royal saw it, and his heart constricted. He said
nothing, but it hurt him to see Tom Majors, who had always been the most cheerful young man at any party, just sitting there, cut off from all the rest of them.
Finally the women went back to the kitchen to do the dishes, and Mr. Carter yawned and said, “I’ve had a long day—I’m going to bed. It’s good to have you home, Royal,” he said, and then he left.
Royal sat on the sofa with Morena beside him. She was content to hold his hand and stroke it lovingly. He smiled down at her. The only language she really understood was the expression on someone’s face or the tone of voice.
“You’re mighty pretty, Morena,” he murmured. Then he looked across at Tom and Esther. “She sure is a beauty, Esther is.”
“Yes, she is. She looks like Ma,” Tom said. He smoothed the blonde hair and touched the silky cheek with his finger. Esther grabbed it and pulled at it vigorously. This brought a smile to Tom’s face, the first of the evening.
For a while the two men talked, but it was an effort. No matter how much Royal spoke, Tom answered only in monosyllables. At last Tom rose, put the baby on the floor, and said, “I guess I’ll go to bed too. It’s good to have you back, Royal.”
Royal sat beside Morena, listening to the thump of Tom’s crutches echo from the hall. Then he heard a door slam. Finally he picked up Esther, and he and Morena went into the kitchen, where his mother dried her hands and carried the baby off to bed.
When it was past everyone’s bedtime, Royal was left for a few moments alone with Sarah.
“It’s real bad, Sarah,” Royal said quietly. “Is he always like this?”
“I haven’t seen him smile hardly twice since he got here,” Sarah answered slowly.
“But surely he knows that life’s not over!”
“He acts as though it is. He never talks about what is going to happen. He doesn’t talk about anything.”
“But there are ways that he can be helped. There are artificial legs. He could get one of those.”
Sarah turned and faced her brother. “Ezra has tried to talk him into that.”